Robbie Daw presents a weekly pop music update here on Towleroad! Robbie runs his own site called Chart Rigger.

No, it didn’t come during an interview with a gay magazine. Rather, Coldplay frontman Chris Martin was posed with the question, “Do you know how I know you’re gay?” while answering reader questions submitted to Blender’s“Dear Superstar” column. The answers are posted at the magazine’s website in audio form.

So came Martin’s reply: “We have a lot of gay fans. It’s something I’m very proud of. In fact—well, I’m proud of anybody after us—a lot of gay guys like us ’cause of the music. Guy [Berryman, guitarist] does have a big gay following as well, because he’s…you know. One of our best concerts ever, this gentleman came up to us after the concert, and he went straight up to Guy and said, ‘More light on you. They need to put more light on you.’ We were like, Yep, you tell him, man.”

What Chris Martin, who admittedly has only had one other relationship before Gwyneth Paltrow, stopped short of saying was that Guy Berryman (pictured right) is pretty darn hot…something he actually goes into full-on when answering another question. But first, the Blender moderator jumped into the gay questioning.

BLENDER: “When I was doing some research for this interview, I read—this is probably a pretty fairly common experience among, I will say, boys or dudes of our demographic—where at boarding school for awhile, you weren’t quite sure. You felt that you might be gay up until a certain age.”

CM: “Sadly not. I wish I could report… I was very lucky because we lived right next to a girl’s school. So there was never that sort of ‘Which one on the island would you eat first?’ kind of period.”

Interesting choice of analogy. Anyway, here’s what he went on to say about Guy Berryman: “My entire life is spent trying to push him forward at photo shoots. This is a serious answer—he is our packaging. He’s a good-looking guy. The rest of us look OK—we work hard to stay thin and all that stuff&#8212but he’s a handsome bastard, and none of us pretend that if he wasn’t in the band we’d be as popular… He’s reponsible for all of our calendar sales.”

Sub Pop—the seminal Seattle indie label that unleashed Nirvana, Soundgarden, emo, The Shins and Postal Service into the mainstream—has turned 20. It’s latest slogan? “Sub Pop…going out of business for 20 years.” Billboard runs through the label’s top 20 moments, albums and videos, as well as interviews co-founder Jonathan Poneman. iTunes also has a special selection of discounted top picks from Sub Pop’s back catalog to celebrate the anniversary.

The Los Angeles Timesinterviews Vince Clarke and Alison Moyet of Yaz ahead off the duo’s three L.A. shows this week: “I’m aware that I have a lot of gay fans, and I love it. In the 1970s when I grew up as a punk rocker, we were all on the outside and I think that we found common ground with one another.” The four-disc Yaz box set, In Your Room, was released yesterday.